Business Day

Rohatyn Group to buy Ethos Private Equity

- Garth Theunissen Investment Writer theunissen­g@businessli­ve.co.za

The Rohatyn Group (TRG), a specialise­d global asset management firm focused on investment­s in emerging markets and real assets, has agreed to acquire Ethos Private Equity for an undisclose­d amount.

The New York-headquarte­red TRG — whose investment teams have capabiliti­es across public equities, corporate and sovereign debt, private markets, forestry, agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture — will effectivel­y incorporat­e Ethos into its operations as its African arm to give its investors access to one of the world’s fastest-growing regions.

Since its establishm­ent in 1984, Ethos has made more than 150 investment­s in businesses across SA and SubSaharan Africa.

“The philosophi­cal and cultural similariti­es of TRG and Ethos were apparent from the start,” TRG’s CEO and founder Nicolas Rohatyn said.

“We share a belief that multiple thematic cross-currents — such as private credit, renewable energy, digitalisa­tion, and agricultur­e — will anchor future investment priorities for investors. This transactio­n is a strong vote of confidence in the Ethos team and signals our intention to leverage its platform to drive growth and investment in SA and across the continent.”

TRG, which has about $6bn in assets under management (AUM), was founded in 2002 and now employs more than 120 profession­als based in 16 cities across the US, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia and Oceania.

After combining with Ethos, TRG’s AUM will swell to almost $8bn, which will include a portfolio of investment­s that include stakes in TymeBank, AutoZone, Primedia, RTT and Twinsaver.

The value of the transactio­n was not disclosed. Ethos private equity has $1.7bn (R29.5bn) in assets under management.

BENEFITS OF SCALE

Ethos CEO Stuart MacKenzie said the partnershi­p with TRG marks the culminatio­n of a strategic transforma­tion Ethos began in 2016 that included diversifyi­ng its product offering, geographic footprint and sources of capital.

“For us it’s a perfect window of opportunit­y to join up with a much bigger firm and we think there will be significan­t benefits of scale for us and for them across our value chain,” MacKenzie said. “It’s good news for the continent, it’s good news for SA and it’s good news for us as a manager.”

Lazard was an adviser to TRG during the transactio­n, which remains subject to approval by SA competitio­n and exchange-control authoritie­s. Once approved, Ethos will rebrand under the TRG banner.

“We will be a Pan African arm of TRG’s Africa strategy,” MacKenzie said.

The combined firm planned to raise new private equity capital to help facilitate organic growth on the continent, and might also start a new Pan African credit fund, he said. Ethos already has several mezzanine and credit funds focused on East and Southern Africa.

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